New international research on plant and animal changes over the past 50,000 years suggests that climate change was a primary driver of extinction and reduced diversity in the North. Researchers from Europe and North America studied changes in ancient DNA of plants and mammals preserved across the Arctic. Cutting-edge technology applied on an unprecedented scale was utilized to better understand sensitive populations and ecosystems, and the impact of climate change.
“The disappearance of large animals in the Arctic, the so-called ‘charismatic megafauna’ like woolly mammoths, has fascinated scientists for decades,” said co-author David W. Beilman, professor and undergraduate chair of the Department of Geography and Environment. “Using preserved DNA from frigid lakes and frozen ground, prolonged periods were found – over thousands of years – where megafauna and humans co-existed in the same region, suggesting rapid climate and habitat changes were the primary drivers of large animal extinction.”
Because polar regions are warming much faster than the global average, Beilman said drastic changes often occur there first, and can be viewed as coal-mine canaries for what may come elsewhere.
“The lesson warns how the reach of climate change extends to all corners of the globe,” he said. “Even those like the Arctic and Antarctic – which we think of as far away from hot, crowded places in the world – are driving climate change today.”
The scientific paper was published in Nature, the world’s leading multidisciplinary science journal.